How We Create the Metascore Magic

A peek behind the curtain

Creating our proprietary Metascores is a complicated process. We carefully curate a large group of the world’s most respected critics,
assign scores to their reviews, and apply a weighted average to summarize the range of their opinions. The result is a single number that captures
the essence of critical opinion in one Metascore. Each movie, game, television show and album featured on Metacritic gets a Metascore when we've
collected at least four critics' reviews.

Why the term “weighted average” matters

Metascore is a weighted average in that we assign more importance, or weight, to some critics and publications than others, based on their quality
and overall stature. In addition, for music and movies, we also normalize the resulting scores (akin to "grading on a curve" in college), which prevents
scores from clumping together.

How to interpret a Metascore

Metascores range from 0-100, with higher scores indicating better overall reviews. We highlight Metascores in three colors so that you can instantly
compare: green scores for favorable reviews, yellow scores for mixed reviews, and red scores for unfavorable reviews.

How We Calculate Our Scores: The Long FAQ

Score calculation questions

Q: Are user votes included in the METASCORE calculations?

A: No. While we solicit votes from our site visitors on movies, games, and music, and television shows we do not include those votes in the METASCORE.
The METASCORE is a weighted average of the published critic reviews contained in the chart on that page, and thus does not include any votes or comments
from our users. However, you may, of course, see the average user vote by glancing at the USER SCORE to the right of the METASCORE on every summary page.

Q: What's with these green, yellow, and red colors?

A: Assuming you are looking at our website and not at your Christmas tree, it's fairly simple: "good" METASCORES are coded in green; "average"
METASCORES are yellow, and "bad" METASCORES are red. (This same color coding is also used for the individual critic and user grades.) If the numbers
are too complicated to read, you can simply look at the pretty colors to tell what the reviews said.

Here's how the scores break down:

General Meaning of Score

Movies, TV & Music

Games

Universal Acclaim

81 - 100

90 - 100

Generally Favorable Reviews

61 - 80

75 - 89

Mixed or Average Reviews

40 - 60

50 - 74

Generally Unfavorable Reviews

20 - 39

20 - 49

Overwhelming Dislike

0 - 19

0 - 19

Q: Well then, can I see all of your grade conversion scales?

A: Absolutely! Some of the conversions are obvious (for example, if a critic uses a 0-10 scale, his/her grade is simply multiplied by ten).
Some of the less obvious conversions are displayed below: